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  1. The Cellar Door Sessions 1970 is a boxed live album released in 2005. It compiles six of ten sets that were performed over four December nights in 1970 at the D. C. nightclub the Cellar Door. Despite similar formatting, it is not a part of the Miles Davis Series of box sets.

  2. The sextet on The Cellar Door ‘s bandstand – Davis, saxophonist Gary Bartz, Keith Jarret (playing electric organ and electric piano), Motown bassist Michael Henderson, drummer Jack DeJohnette, and percussionist Airto Moreira – is a sheer marvel of kinetic energy.

  3. 20 de dic. de 2005 · For devotees of Miles Davis's so-called "electric period," the full release of the music recorded live in December 1970 at the Washington, DC club The Cellar Door has long been something of a holy grail.

  4. The box contains six of the 10 sets Davis' band played, remixed and sounding great (especially via an increased presence from Michael Henderson's bass), and extensive notes from everyone who...

  5. 22 de sept. de 2005 · This 1970 band marked the permanent switch from acoustic to electric bass in Davis’s working groups and, thus, was the first to lose the ability to work as a traditional jazz band — it not only...

  6. Listening to the last two CDs of The Cellar Door Sessions 1970, Sony's massive six-disc box set that documents six of the ten dates Davis and his band recorded during their four-day engagement at the fabled club, is a revelation now.

  7. 18 de dic. de 2005 · Jack DeJohnette and Michael Henderson supply a pop/rock drum backbeat and thundering bass foundation that lets the band's front line groove all night long. With extended pieces and few breaks between numbers, the Davis band proves inexhaustible.